‘Alco-Pop’ May Be Harmful To Your Health

Four Loko alcohol energy drinks are shown next to beer at Bella Vino Fine Wine and Spirits in Farmington Hills, Mich., Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010. The state regulatory agency recently passed a motion this month to examine the packaging of flavored alcoholic drinks with caffeine and other stimulants. Michigan is among the first states to independently target the drinks, which are also under federal scrutiny over concerns about health effects and whether they are marketed to minors. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)(Credit: AP)

LOS ANGELES (CBS) — There’s a nationwide push to get the FDA to ban highly caffeinated, but legal, alcoholic drinks.

These come under several different brand names and pack a 12-percent alcohol content, roughly equivalent to three beers. One brand, “Four Loko” has already been banned on some college campuses.

Your typical college kegger isn’t so typical anymore. Traditional beer is being replaced with drinks where booze is infused with caffeine, and the effects can be deadly.

For instance, “Four Loko,” is responsible for sickening dozens of students at a party in Washington. Nine of them had to be hospitalized.

It has already been banned on some college campuses, but many Southland students still have the green light.

It’s called “blackout in a can”. Alco–pop. Another version of the date rape drug. The all–nighter. Morningside College student, Matt Mayfield, says, “You could buy one and probably be feeling pretty good the rest of the night.”

Marketed under the name “Four Loko,” health experts say this mixture of alcohol and caffeine is no energy drink.

“The amount of alcohol, roughly 12 percent, could be a little over three beers worth of alcohol and then the caffeine amount in there is equal to approximately a can of Red Bull plus a shot of espresso,” Linda Kalin of the Iowa Statewide Poison Center says.

Despite the high and the buzz it may provide, Mayfield says there is another reason it’s become popular.

He adds, “Because it’s so cheap. You can get like two of them for $4 and that’s like buying a 12 pack and it actually tastes better than regular beer.”

The can may be cheap, but the result? A high price to pay. The caffeine content can actually mask and delay the alcohol’s effect. Kalin says if kids overdo it on these “alco–pops,” they might not know it… until it’s too late.

here we go again wanting to ban a product rather then teach our young ones or for that matter the older ones to to use MODERATION if we were to ban all the things we eat or drink that could make you sick could we not ban nearly everything

The FDA upon coordination with the EPA and Surgeon General has BANNED exhaling (part of breathing). The human population is no longer allowed to exhale. Humans exhale Co2 (Carbon Dioxide) which has negative effects on the environment and can be deadly when breathed in excessive amounts. Violators caught exhaling will be subject to a $40 trillion dollar fine and/or 17 lifetimes in Federal Prison. Thank you for attention.